program implements the user level part of the NFS service. The
main functionality is handled by the
.B nfsd
-kernel module; the user space program merely starts the specified
-number of kernel threads.
+kernel module. The user space program merely specifies what sort of sockets
+the kernel service should listen on, what NFS versions it should support, and
+how many kernel threads it should use.
.P
The
.B rpc.mountd
by NFS clients.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
+.B \-d " or " \-\-debug
+enable logging of debugging messages
+.TP
.B \-H " or " \-\-host hostname
specify a particular hostname (or address) that NFS requests will
be accepted on. By default,
.B rpc.nfsd
can support both NFS version 2,3 and the newer version 4.
.TP
+.B \-s " or " \-\-syslog
+By default,
+.B rpc.nfsd
+logs error messages (and debug messages, if enabled) to stderr. This option makes
+.B rpc.nfsd
+log these messages to syslog instead. Note that errors encountered during
+option processing will still be logged to stderr regardless of this option.
+.TP
.B \-T " or " \-\-no-tcp
Disable
.B rpc.nfsd
.B rpc.nfsd 0
will stop all threads and thus close any open connections.
+.SH NOTES
+If the program is built with TI-RPC support, it will enable any protocol and
+address family combinations that are marked visible in the
+.B netconfig
+database.
+
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR rpc.mountd (8),
.BR exports (5),
.BR exportfs (8),
.BR rpc.rquotad (8),
-.BR nfsstat (8).
+.BR nfsstat (8),
+.BR netconfig(5).
.SH AUTHOR
Olaf Kirch, Bill Hawes, H. J. Lu, G. Allan Morris III,
and a host of others.